HSBC - BankTrack

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HSBC - BankTrack

coal bank briefing
This briefing is one in a series published
by BankTrack, an international NGO that
tracks banks and campaigns to transform
their impact on people and planet, and is
part of our Banks: Quit Coal! campaign.
Visit www.coalbanks.org for extensive
data and coverage of the banking sector’s
global coal financing. For any additional
information or feedback, contact BankTrack’s Climate and Energy Campaign
Coordinator Yann Louvel at:
[email protected]
September 2015
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for coal mining and coal power
companies alike, has revealed that
between 2005 and April 2014 HSBC
extended over €7.9 billion to the
most climate-damaging fossil fuel
sector.
HSBC’s persistent bankrolling of
the sector now appears to be at odds
with advice it is providing to other
investors. As revealed by Newsweek
in mid-April, HSBC analysts have
sounded the alarm to investors on
fossil fuels, laying out three options:
“divesting completely from fossil
fuels; shedding the highest risk
investments such as coal and oil;
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The advice issued recently
to investors from HSBC analysts
may have been that there is an
increasing probability of fossil fuel
companies becoming “economically non-viable”. Yet the bank’s
own financing of the coal industry
remains substantial, if – despite
a policy advance in 2011 restricting its lending to certain coal-fired
power plants – hard to predict.
BankTrack research into the
global private banking sector’s coal
financing, covering project finance,
corporate loans and revolving credit
facilities, share and bond issues
HSBC coal loans and underwriting
for selected companies, 2010-2013
(in million euros)
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There’s no predicting HSBC coal financing, but
climate and reputational risks guaranteed
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Global Justice Now protest HSBC’s appetite
for coal at the bank’s 2014 AGM.
or staying the course and engaging
with fossil fuel companies as an
investor.” When it comes to coal,
the bank itself remains stuck on
“staying the course”, with or without
meaningful engagement.
As this briefing describes, a
string of controversial coal mining
majors are still receiving substantial
financial support from HSBC and
the bank’s much vaunted coal power
policy is still no absolute deterrent for
dubious coal power plant investing.
Continued HSBC finance for the coal
industry presents enduring high
risks for the bank’s reputation and
the world’s climate.
HSBC coal investments
not helping human
rights in Colombia
A string of abuses and controversies linked to coal mining regions
in Colombia has surfaced in recent
years. Also surfacing are concerns
about HSBC financing for projects
and companies that are alleged
to have ties to some of the worst
offenders – the bank’s involvement
in Colombia’s coal mining sector is
extensive and highly problematic.
The vast Cerrejón mine in the La
Guajira region of Colombia, covering
69,000 hectares, has – according to
Colombian campaigners – forcibly
displaced
farming
communities, polluted water supplies and
destroyed sacred sites. The Cerrejón
mine is one-third owned by the
mining giant BHP Billiton that once
again in 2014 enjoyed financial
support from HSBC. As too did Anglo
American and Glencore, BHP Billiton’s partners in Cerrejón. Between
2009 and May 2013, HSBC’s total
involvement in companies behind
Cerrejón amounted to £3.133
billion.
Pre-dating the Cerrejón mine
are even muddier Colombian coal
associations that BankTrack believes
HSBC must acknowledge and act
on. They relate to the internal
conflict and paramilitary violence
that have gripped life in the country
for decades and influenced, among
other things, the mining sector.
The Dutch peace movement
PAX, which has worked in Colombia
for over 30 years supporting victims
of violence, has compiled extensive
evidence of coal mining’s bearing
on serious human rights violations.
The US miner Drummond and a
fully owned subsidiary of the mining
company Glencore – both notable
HSBC clients – are central to PAX’s
findings.
According to PAX, in its report
of June 2014 ‘The Dark Side of
Coal: Paramilitary Violence in the
Mining Region of Cesar’, from
1996 onwards paramilitaries of
the United Self-Defense Forces of
Colombia (AUC) started operating
in the vicinity of the mining concessions of Drummond and Prodeco
“We recognise that we have responsibilities not only towards our customers, employees
and shareholders, but also the countries and communities in which we operate.” Douglas
Flint, HSBC Group Chairman, HSBC Sustainability website
The Cerrejon coal mine in Columbian is divided into three
main areas - Cerrejon North Zone, Cerrejon Central Zone and
Cerrejon South Zone - and stretches over 170,000 acres.
Image licensed under Creative Commons: Santiago La Rotta.
(Glencore’s subsidiary), creating
a new front in this area – the Juan
Andrés Álvarez Front that quickly
grew to 600 members.
On the basis of national police
figures, it is conservatively estimated
that between 1996 and 2006 the
Juan Andrés Álvarez Front drove
over 59,000 farmers from their land,
committed at least 2,600 selective
killings, murdered an estimated 500
people in massacres and “disappeared” more than 240 people.
PAX research has helped
publicise testimonies, made under
oath in legal proceedings by ex-paramilitary leaders and ex-contractors,
which indicate that the mining
companies Drummond and Prodeco
supported the paramilitaries in a
variety of ways.
Most striking is the allega-
tion from one Drummond contractor, convicted for his involvement
and who handed over papers which
according to him show the financial
ties between Drummond and the
paramilitaries, that both mining
companies supported the paramilitaries both financially and materially.
Drummond and Prodeco have
denied these allegations. Nonetheless, the cycle of violence in the
Cesar mining region continues to
this day, and the cloud hanging over
the companies’ Colombian operations presumably can’t have escaped
the attention of financiers.
HSBC, however, has been
involved in several financial transactions with both Drummond and
Glencore in recent years:
• For Drummond, a US$250
million bond issue in 2009
and two revolving credit facilities of US$550 million in
2010 and US$750 million in
2012.
• F
or Glencore, several corporate loans, revolving credit
facilities, share issues and
bond issues since 2010, the
latest being a €700 million
bond issue and a €6.6 billion
revolving credit facility (involving 71 banks in total) in 2014.
BankTrack and PAX believe it is
now incumbent on HSBC to reconsider its business relationships with
Drummond and Glencore. We are
calling for a precautionary suspension of new investments until
the companies have contributed
substantially to effective reconciliation for the victims of violence in
their region of influence.
Colombia’s coal boom of recent
years may be over, but thousands of
victims have been left behind. HSBC
investors may have some further
pause for thought: why is the bank
going anywhere near these types
of extreme coal investments and
companies?
Happy Still to Be in
Coal – the limits of
policy coverage
HSBC has specific policies
covering at least some of its
financing to coal mining and coal
power projects. At issue, however, is
the effectiveness of these policies
when the bank’s support for the coal
industry continues to grow.
Bearing in mind that even in
2014 some of the coal mining
sector’s most impactful companies –
the likes of Anglo American and BHP
Billiton – remained among HSBC’s
clients, its mining sector policy is at
best no better than banking industry
standard in addressing and conducting due diligence on coal mining’s
usually
aggressive
environmental impacts. While HSBC’s mining
policy does contain some elements
that take account of human rights,
the company currently has no standalone human rights policy. Based on
our research there is no evidence of
systematic consideration of human
rights impacts as part of the bank’s
due diligence process.
HSBC has been ahead of most
other banks in its lending criteria
to coal-fired power plants (CFPPs)
following the adoption of its Energy
Sector Policy in 2011, which specifically states: “We will not provide
financial services which directly
support new CFPPs with individual units of 500MW or more and a
carbon intensity exceeding 850 g.
CO2/kWh in developing countries,
and 550 g. CO2/kWh in developed
countries.”
No other bank has such a
threshold when it comes to project
finance for CFPPs in developed
countries, though it remains unclear
how the ‘policy restrictions’ also
concretely apply to HSBC’s general
corporate financing. What’s more,
HSBC’s €100 million lending in
2012 to the 450MW Tufanbeyli CFPP
in Turkey (in fact fired by lignite, the
most polluting form of coal, and
also featuring an array of social,
environmental and human rights
issues) illustrates how certain power
ceilings enshrined in policies can
still wave through large chunks of
financing for problematic projects. A
certain amount of coal policy stringency may be in force at HSBC, but
that alone is clearly not preventing
consistently high annual volumes of
coal sector financing.
HSBC coal commitments
With coal finance levels remaining solid at HSBC, we really think it’s about time that the bank:
• Commits to end any new coal project finance and to decrease its general corporate coal financing, both for coal mining and coal power.
• C
ommits to living up to its responsibilities to communities around the world by refusing future
business for coal companies and projects linked to human rights abuses.
• Takes BankTrack’s Paris Pledge to quit coal
HSBC, you are cordially invited … to take the Paris Pledge and quit coal
The world over, responsible financiers concerned
about climate change and focused on enhancing their
support for clean energy projects and initiatives (as
HSBC’s latest annual report tells us it is) will be very
much aware of the fast approaching UN Climate Summit
in Paris, taking place at the end of this year.
This meeting, being billed by many as ‘make-orbreak’, is aimed at deciding on an international follow up
Treaty to the Kyoto Protocol, committing all countries in
the world to emission reduction targets that will keep the
global temperature rise within 2 degrees, the assumed
threshold beyond which already ongoing climate change
will become outright catastrophic for people and planet.
In the run-up to Paris, BankTrack – in collaboration with our civil society organisation allies around
the world – has launched the Paris Pledge campaign.
The aim of this campaign is clear: to invite the world’s
private banks that are still investing in coal sector
companies and projects to publicly pledge to terminate
their financing for the coal industry. Here’s why.
Coal: climate and public enemy number one
The continued exploration and burning of coal is a
major threat to the climate. Coal is the single greatest
source of man-made carbon dioxide emissions – 44 % of
all global emissions coming from fossil fuels come from
coal. Since the year 2000, global coal production has
grown by 69%, to a staggering 7.9 billion tons annually.
The installed capacity of coal-fired power plants has
grown 35% since the year 2000. We are clearly on the
road to disaster if we do not manage to stop coal – and
quickly.
The role of banks
Private sector (commercial) banks continue to
play a major role in bankrolling the coal industry. As
BankTrack research (available at www.coalbanks.org)
has revealed, total banking sector support for the coal
sector amounted to at least $500 billion between 2005
and April 2014. To date, there is no sign of declining
support from banks, with a clear upward trend and a
+360% rise in these coal finance figures between 2005
and 2013.
We, and the planet, are counting on you, HSBC!
As a prominent ‘coal bank’, HSBC (you’re currently
number 17 in our Coal Bank Top 20 rankings), we hereby
invite you to consider and take the Paris Pledge prior
to the Paris Climate. You’ll be hearing from us – and
thousands of others – again on this in the weeks and
months ahead. All the best, BankTrack.
Paris Pledge text – for banks involved in coal financing
In recognition of the grave threat to the world’s’ climate posed by ongoing mining and use of coal, as well as
the urgent need to transition towards a low/no carbon economy, we hereby pledge to fully phase out our finance
for coal mining and coal power.
This phase-out will cover all our banking activities and services, including lending, share and bond underwriting, asset management and advisory services, and will start with an immediate end to any new coal project
finance. It will be accompanied by a shift in our energy lending towards the financing of energy efficiency and
renewable energy.
We commit to publish a detailed ‘coal phase-out plan’ within six months after the Paris Summit, which will
include a clear time path and targets for each of our products and services. We also commit to regularly and
publicly report on the implementation of our coal phase-out plan.
Signed,
HSBC?
find out more at the paris pledge resource website: dotheparispledge.org